Chris Green
8.1K posts

Chris Green
@onlychrisgreen
Dad of 4. Sick of mediocrity. Unreasonably relentless in everything I do. Software Dev | Agency Owner | Relentless Builder.


because AI is a tool for making your ideas come to life, not the other way around... you can use it for ideation, sure, but you still have to steer it with your own creative process - it's only useful for idea iteration



why does ai have such bad ideas for things to do. it cannot come up with a good idea no matter how hard you try to make it


Someone is going to build a worldclass “Brain” for enterprises & make a stupid amount of money. Why? As @da_fant said, “coding w ai is solved bc all context is in the git repo. knowledge work is difficult bc context is spread out. an ai system that creates a git repo w all context for a knowledge worker will be able to 100% automate the work.” When companies talk about being data ready for AI, this is what they’re implicitly saying. Engineering has been prepared for this moment for a long time because of the deterministic nature of code, the centralization/versioning of data (read: GitHub), and AI tools that are largely build by engineers for engineers. But for the rest of white collar work, there’s a TON of catching up to do to properly harness the power of the technology. The big challenge here, and why no one has truly cracked the code for "an ai system that creates a git repo w all context for a knowledge worker" is because unlike code, most knowledge is 1) distributed, 2) unstructured, and 3) unverifiable. It's distributed: transcripts live in Granola. Documents in Notion. Customer Data in Hubspot. ERP. Emails. Slack messages. Random spreadsheets. SOP docs. Etc. Etc. Building an ingestion engine that connects to all of your disparate data sources and auto-updates based on the shelf-life of the data is the first, and frankly, easiest step of the process. Next, it's unstructured: let's say I want to create a proposal for a potential client. To nail the proposal, I want it to pull important information from a variety of sources. The specific asks & background from our initial sales call. Previous proposals to anchor ourselves to a proven format. And completed sprint boards from Linear, so the pricing & timeline in the document is grounded in truth. Whether it's a thoughtful filesystem (a la Obsidian) or an OpenClaw-esque memory structure, the brain needs to be great at self-organizing in a thoughtful schema. This is very hard, especially if you want to build a generalizable brain that can be shaped to an array of different enterprises. And finally, most knowledge is unverifiable: writing a function, running a unit test, and seeing if the code works is easy. It works or it doesn't. Using AI to accelerate your content creation process is highly subjective. What is a good/bad idea? Is the content in your voice or not? Does it feel like slop or novel? Answering these questions are both difficult and non-verifiable. That same system described above doesn't just have to be great at organizing & forming coherent relationships, but it also has to be great at self-improving based on feedback from the user. Memory systems (like those introduced by OpenClaw) are great to a point, but as you scale the corpus of data within your company's brain, things like compaction and cleaning become wildly important to avoid the needle in the haystack problem. Someone is going to figure out how to solve this problem, and when they do, not only will they make a shit ton of money, but they'll be robinhood for knowledge workers, enabling non-engineers to enjoy the sort of leverage that only technical folks have felt for the last few years.






so you mean to tell me they put a bio-weapon in a tick it bit me and now I just have to be sick for the rest of my life?



my mom just showed me her new favorite song took me 2 seconds to tell it was AI then confirmed it by the album cover told her and she said she knows but she loves the song. are we reaching the point where AI artists and music has become not slop? btw the song is actually pretty good it’s just weird to think my moms favorite song is completely synthetic





